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| For seven years, India Oxenberg was a member of Keith Raniere's cult NXIVM — physically branded with his initials and kept as one of his sex slaves. Despite growing up in glamourous Malibu as the daughter of former "Dynasty" star Catherine Oxenberg, India moved to NXIVM's headquarters in Albany, NY, and worked to recruit other women for Raniere as a member of his elite Dominus Obsequious Sororium group. Meanwhile, Catherine never stopped fighting to get her daughter back, writing to the FBI and speaking out publicly against the cult. Now Raniere is serving 120 years in prison and Catherine and India are reunited. In an exclusive shoot and interview, they reveal how the cult manipulated India so much, she was no longer able to feel love for her mother. "That was the scary thing: to not know if I was going to feel that again," India, 30, told The Post. "You just don't think that someone could take that from you." Read our full shocking story below. We also peek inside another strange world — that of Green Bank, W. Va., known as the quietest place in America. The people who live here are restricted from using Wi-Fi or cellphones, which is why the area attracts a host of eccentrics who "want to be alone," as one local put it. Two more stories explore how labor shortages are affecting wealthy customers in the Hamptons and small business owners in Pittsburgh, while a searing new book excerpt urges Americans to speak up against the cancel culture. Enjoy — and have a super Sunday! Margi Conklin Sunday Editor, New York Post | | | | | | We Conquered the Cult | | | | "Dynasty" actress Catherine Oxenberg reveals how she wrested her daughter India away from the clutches of Keith Raniere's sex slave group NXIVM. READ MORE | | | | | | | | | Wigging Out | | | | With a summer shortage of hair stylists, manicurists, waiters and other service providers, Hamptonites are freaking out over losing their little luxuries. READ MORE | | | | | | | | | The Quiet Americans | | | | Inside Green Bank, West Virginia, the most silent place in America, where 8,000 residents aren't allowed to use cellphones or Wi-Fi. READ MORE | | | | | | | | | Speak Up, Nation | | | | A new book argues that left-wing "authoritarians" and their cancel culture have muzzled the silent majority — and it's time to fight back. READ MORE | | | | | QUOTE OF THE WEEK | | | "I saw darkness. I thought I was going to see the world, but we weren't quite high enough." | |
| | — 82-year-old Wally Funk, giving her ride into space on Bezos' Blue Origin mission a lukewarm review |
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IN CASE YOU MISSED IT Billion-Dollar Babies WeWork founder Adam Neumann and his wife, Rebekah, treated workers as personal servants as they partied around the world, a shocking new book reveals. READ MORE ONE LAST THING | | | |
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